American author and investigative reporter

Clifford IrvingBornClifford Michael Irving(1930-11-05)November 5, 1930New York, New York, U.S.DiedDecember 19, 2017(2017-12-19) (aged 87)Sarasota, Florida, U.S.OccupationNovelist, investigative reporterAlma materCornell UniversityYears active1956–2015SpouseNina Wilcox
​ ​(m. 1952, annulled)​Claire Lydon
​ ​(m. 1958; died 1959)​Fay Brooke
​ ​(m. 1962; div. 1965)​Edith Sommer
​ ​(m. 1967, divorced))​Maureen Earl
​ ​(m. 1984; div. 1998)​Julie Schall ​(m. 1998)​
Clifford Michael Irving (November 5, 1930 – December 19, 2017) was an American novelist and investigative reporter. Although he published 20 novels, he is best known for an “autobiography” allegedly written as told to Irving by billionaire recluse Howard Hughes. The fictional work was to have been published in 1972. After Hughes denounced him and sued the publisher, McGraw-Hill, Irving and his collaborators confessed to the hoax. He was sentenced to 2+1⁄2 years in prison, of which he served 17 months.[1]
Irving wrote The Hoax (1981), his account of events surrounding the development and sale of the fake autobiography. The book was adapted as a 2006 biopic of the same name starring Richard Gere as Clifford Irving. He continued to write and published his later books as e-books available via Kindle and Nook.[2]

Early life and writing career[edit]
Irving grew up in New York City, the son of Jay Irving, a Collier’s cover artist and the creator of the syndicated comic strip Pottsy, and his wife, Dorothy.[3] After graduating in 1947 from Manhattan’s selective High School of Music and Art, Irving attended Cornell University. He graduated with honors in English.
Working as a copy boy at The New York Times, Irving wrote his first novel, On a Darkling Plain (1956), published by Putnam.[citation needed]
Irving completed his second novel, The Losers (1958), while traveling in Europe. His third novel, The Valley (1960), is a mythic Western saga, published by McGraw-Hill.[4]
After returning to Ibiza, Irving became friendly with Hungarian art forger Elmyr de Hory. The painter asked him to write a biography, which was published as Fake! (1969). Irving and de Hory are both featured in Orson Welles’s film documentary, F for Fake (1974).[5][6]

Personal life[edit]
His first wife was Nina Wilcox. Their marriage was annulled in 1952.[7] Later, on the Spanish island of Ibiza, he met an Englishwoman, Claire Lydon; they married in 1958 and moved to California. She died the following year at Big Sur in an automobile accident on May 8, 1959.[8]
In 1962, after a year spent traveling around the world and living in a houseboat in Kashmir, Irving moved back to Ibiza with his third wife, Fay Brooke, an English photographic model, and their newborn son, Josh. This marriage ended in divorce. In 1967, Irving married Swiss/German artist Edith Sommer. They had two sons, John Edmond (aka “Nedsky”) and Barnaby.[citation needed] He reportedly had a lengthy affair in the 1970s with the Danish actress and singer Nina van Pallandt.[9]
Irving later married English author Maureen “Moish” Earl. From 1984 to 1998 they lived mainly in the mountain town of San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico.[10]
Irving died of pancreatic cancer in Sarasota, Florida, at the age of 87.[11]

Fake autobiography of Howard Hughes[edit]
By 1958, millionaire Howard Hughes had become a recluse. In 1970, in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, Irving met with Richard Suskind, a longtime friend who was an author of children’s books. They conceived a scheme to write Hughes’s purported “autobiography”. Irving and Suskind believed that, because Hughes had completely withdrawn from public life, he would never draw attention by denouncing such a book or filing a lawsuit for libel. Suskind took on the work of research in news archives. Irving started by enlisting the aid of artist and writer friends on Ibiza in order to create letters in Hughes’s own hand, imitating authentic letters they had seen displayed in Newsweek magazine.[8]
Irving contacted his publisher, McGraw-Hill, and said that Hughes had corresponded with him, saying he admired Irving’s book about de Hory. Further, Hughes had expressed interest in Irving’s ghost writing the millionaire’s autobiography. The McGraw-Hill editors invited Irving to New York, where the publishers drafted contracts among Hughes, Irving, and the company. Irving and his friends forged Hughes’s signatures. McGraw-Hill paid an advance of US$100,000, with an additional US$400,000 to be paid to Hughes. Irving later bargained the sum up to US$765,000. McGraw-Hill paid by checks made out to “H. R. Hughes”, which Irving’s Swiss wife Edith deposited to a Swiss bank account which she had opened under the name of “Helga R. Hughes”.[12]

The investigation[edit]
Learning of the planned book, representatives of Hughes’ companies expressed doubts about its authenticity. Frank McCulloch, known for years as the last journalist to interview Hughes, had received an angry call from someone claiming to be Hughes, but when he read the Irving manuscript, became convinced that it was genuine.[13]
McGraw-Hill and Life magazine, which had paid to publish excerpts of the book, continued to support Irving. Osborn Associates, a firm of handwriting experts, further declared the writing samples were authentic. Irving had to submit to a lie-detector test, which indicated inconsistencies but no lies.[14]
On January 7, 1972, Hughes arranged a telephone conference with seven journalists, whose end of the conversation was televised, in which Hughes claimed that he had never even met Irving.[15][16] Irving claimed the voice on the phone was an imposter, but it subsequently became clear that Irving was the fraud.[13]
Hughes’s lawyer, Chester Davis, filed suit against McGraw-Hill, Life, Clifford Irving, and Dell Publications, while Swiss authorities investigated the “Helga R. Hughes” bank account. The Irvings by this time had returned to their home on the Balearic island of Ibiza. After the Swiss bank identified Edith Irving as the depositor of the funds, the hoax was revealed.

Confession and trial[edit]
The Irvings confessed on January 28, 1972. They and Suskind were indicted for “conspiracy to defraud through use of the mails” and pleaded guilty on June 16. Irving spent 17 months in prison. He voluntarily returned the US$765,000 advance to his publishers. Edith, a.k.a. “Helga”, served prison sentences in the United States and in Switzerland.[17]

In July 2005, filming began in Puerto Rico and New York on The Hoax, starring Richard Gere as Irving, Alfred Molina as Suskind, and Marcia Gay Harden as Edith. On March 6, 2007, Hyperion reissued Clifford Irving’s The Hoax in a movie tie-in edition. The film, directed by Swedish filmmaker Lasse Hallström, opened on April 6, 2007, with a DVD release following on October 16. The majority of reviews were favorable.[citation needed]
Irving characterized the film as a clichéd distortion of the story and “a hoax about a hoax”. He described the film’s portrayals of Suskind, Edith Irving and himself as “absurd even more than inaccurate”. He noted that the film was not true to his account, adding events that had not taken place.[18] As the author of the source book, Irving is credited as a writer for the film, but he had himself removed from credit as technical adviser.
In spring 2012, the movie rights to Irving’s nonfiction book, Fake!, were optioned by Steve Golin and Anonymous Content LLP.[citation needed] Irving was commissioned to write a screenplay for the movie. In 2015, Anonymous Content’s option for the book’s dramatic rights expired.

Later life[edit]

In 2012 Irving formatted and placed 12 of his books, including one unpublished novel, for sale on Kindle and Nook. In 2014 he added six books to the total, including his prison journal. Sales were brisk. Irving was open about it, and offered the text of the hoax autobiography for sale in book form. In May 2014 Irving launched his official website, cliffordirving.com.
In November 2014 the Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas announced that they had acquired all of Irving’s literary and personal papers. The archive includes material from more than 50 years, from 1954 to 2012. Among the trove is Irving’s correspondence with lawyers, publishers, colleagues and friends such as Graham Greene, Robert Graves and Irwin Shaw, his personal diaries and prison journals, many manuscript drafts, legal documents from lawsuits and from his 1972 bankruptcy, portions of his Howard Hughes manuscript and extensive handwritten notes and musings. It fills 20 boxes in the research center archive.
“Clifford Irving is an important writer who has lived a colorful and controversial life, which has been a major source of inspiration for much of his literary work”, said Don Carleton, executive director at the Briscoe Center. “I’m delighted that his papers are now available to enrich scholarship here at the university.”

Bibliography[edit]
Books

Book contributions

Further reading[edit]
Bell, Rachael. “A Wild Idea”. CrimeLibrary.com.
Davies, Martin. “Bibliomaniacs’ Corner: Clifford Irving”. Enciclopèdia d’Eivissa i Formentera, 1995. Archived from the original.
Fay, Stephen, and Lewis Chester, Magnus Linklater. Hoax: The Inside Story of the Howard Hughes-Clifford Irving Affair. New York: Viking Press, 1972. Irving says this book is “mostly fiction”.[citation needed]
Graves, Ralph. “The Hughes Affair, starring Clifford Irving”. Life, February 4, 1972, pp. 32–33.
Herzog, Brad. “The Real Thing”. Cornell Alumni Magazine, Vol. 109, No. 5, March/April 2007, pp. 54–59.
Magnússon, Magnús. Fakes, Forgers & Phoneys: Famous Scams and Scamps. Edinburgh: Mainstream, 2007.
Phelan, James. “The Clifford Irving Hoax”. Scandals, Scamps, and Scoundrels: The Casebook of an investigative Reporter. New York: Random House, 1982, pp. 3–39.
Streissguth, Thomas. “Clifford Irving: The Writer Who Faked History”. Hoaxers & Hustlers. Minneapolis: Oliver Press, 1994, pp. 103–121.
References[edit]

^ Kaufman, Michael T. (February 15, 1974). “Irving Is Freed on Parole Here; Says He Owes ‘About a Million'”. The New York Times.

^ “Amazon author page Clifford Irving”. Amazon. Retrieved 2015-02-03.

^ Lambiek comic shop and studio in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. “Lambiek Comiclopedia: Jay Irving”. Lambiek.net. Retrieved 2014-05-20.

^ Irving, Clifford (1960). The Valley. McGraw-Hill.

^ Wallace, Mike (July 2012). “Con Men: Fascinating Profiles of Swindlers and Rogues from the Files of the Most Successful Broadcast in Television History”. 60 Minutes.

^ Minutes, 6. 0. (November 2007). Con Men: Fascinating Profiles of Swindlers and Rogues from the Files of the … ISBN 9781416593195. Retrieved 2014-05-20 – via Books.google.com.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

^ “Enter the Baroness Nina”. Life. No. 11 February 1972. Time, Inc. 1972. pp. 30–39. ISSN 0024-3019.

^ a b “The Fabulous Hoax of Clifford Irving”. Time, February 21, 1972.

^ Reed, Christopher (December 21, 2017). “Clifford Irving obituary”. The Guardian.

^ Irving, Clifford Irving (1990). A Trial. Summit Books. p. 331. ISBN 9780671664220.

^ Grimes, William (December 20, 2017). “Clifford Irving, Author of a Notorious Literary Hoax, Dies at 87”. The New York Times.

^ “The Secret Life of Clifford Irving”. Time. February 14, 1972. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved 2014-05-20.

^ a b Mick Brown (2007-07-28). “You couldn’t make it up”. The Telegraph. Retrieved 2015-08-06.

^ Bell, Rachael. “Clifford Irving’s Hoax”. truTV.com. p. 7. Archived from the original on 2009-06-01. Retrieved 2010-02-26.

^ B. James Gladstone (2013-05-01). The Man Who Seduced Hollywood: The Life and Loves of Greg Bautzer, Tinseltown’s Most Powerful Lawyer.

^ “Creative Day – Fakes, Forgery and PhotoShop Part Two”. 2013-09-07. Retrieved 2015-08-06.

^ “Edith Irving to File for Divorce”. Zurich, Switzerland. Associated Press. May 4, 1974.

^ “Irving, Clifford. “The New Movie””. 2007-12-24. Archived from the original on December 24, 2007. Retrieved 2014-05-20.

External links[edit]

Documentary films

Produced for German television. Richard Suskind portrayed himself.

Includes a segment on Irving filmed around the time the Hughes autobiography scandal broke.

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